Purpose. To investigate the hypothesis that pseudoexfoliation (PSX) syndrome is a systemic disorder, the authors studied the composition of glycoconjugates in the intraocular and extraocular PSX material at the electron microscopic level, using a panel of lectins as cytochemical probes. Methods. The authors examined 8 lid skins, 11 trabecular tissues, and 3 cataractous lenses from human eyes with PSX syndrome. Tissues were processed for electron microscopical histochemistry and stained with PNA, RCA12O, DBA, SBA, ConA, WGA, UEA-I, and Lotus, with an indirect lectin-colloidal gold technique. Results. Both the intraocular and extraocular PSX materials manifested almost identical reactivity to lectins, which indicated that glycoconjugates in the PSX material contained with sugar residues of galactose (PNA, RCA120), alpha-mannose (ConA), and N-acetyl-D-glucosamine (WGA). On the other hand, it was indicated that sugar residues of N-acetyl-D-galactosamine (DBA, SBA) and fucose (UEA-I, Lotus) were absent. Granular inclusions and microfibrils in the capsule and ocular zonules were stained similarly and weakly. Conclusions. The intraocular and extraocular PSX materials contained the same sugar residues of glycoconjugates, which suggested that those materials had the same nature. This study, the first documentation of lectin-binding sites on the extraocular PSX material, supported the hypothesis of PSX syndrome as a systemic disorder.